| 正面 | 6213.bachelor 英 ['bætʃələ]美 ['bætʃəlɚ] ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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| 背面 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 释义: 1. bach- + -el (指小后缀) + -or.2. => 年轻的人、新手、最低级别的人、尚未交配的动物。3. (白痴了,现在的大学生,毕业的时候都变傻了,而且毕业即意味着失恋)学士/单身汉。4. ba(爸爸) + che(车) + l (联想高个子) + -or(表示人的后缀) => 爸爸车上那个高个子的人是个单身汉。5. bachelor 学士/单身汉 ——白吃了n. 学士;单身汉;(尚未交配的)小雄兽n. (Bachelor)人名;(英)巴彻勒 例句: 1. The flat contained the basic essentials for bachelor life.那套公寓配有单身生活的基本必需品。 bachelor 学士,单身汉来自拉丁词bacilum, 杆,棍。原指旧时骑士跟班,持一根木棍跟随骑士学习。 bachelorbachelor: [13] The ultimate origins of bachelor are obscure, but by the time it first turned up, in Old French bacheler (from a hypothetical Vulgar Latin *baccalāris), it meant ‘squire’ or ‘young knight in the service of an older knight’. This was the sense it had when borrowed into English, and it is preserved, in fossilized form, in knight bachelor. Subsequent semantic development was via ‘university graduate’ to, in the late 14th century, ‘unmarried man’.A resemblance to Old Irish bachlach ‘shepherd, peasant’ (a derivative of Old Irish bachall ‘staff’, from Latin baculum, source of English bacillus and related to English bacteria) has led some to speculate that the two may be connected. English baccalaureate [17] comes via French baccalauréat or medieval Latin baccalaureātus from medieval Latin baccalaureus ‘bachelor’, which was an alteration of an earlier baccalārius, perhaps owing to an association with the ‘laurels’ awarded for academic success (Latin bacca lauri meant literally ‘laurel berry’).bachelor (n.)c. 1300, "young man;" also "youthful knight, novice in arms," from Old French bacheler, bachelor, bachelier (11c.) "knight bachelor," a young squire in training for knighthood, also "young man; unmarried man," and as a university title, of uncertain origin, perhaps from Medieval Latin baccalarius "vassal farmer, adult serf without a landholding," one who helps or tends a baccalaria "field or land in the lord's demesne" (according to old French sources, perhaps from an alteration of vacca "a cow" and originally "grazing land" [Kitchin]). Or from Latin baculum "a stick," because the squire would practice with a staff, not a sword. "Perhaps several independent words have become confused in form" [Century Dictionary]. Meaning in English expanded early 14c. to "young unmarried man," late 14c. to "one who has taken the lowest degree in a university." Bachelor party as a pre-wedding ritual is from 1882." |
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